Transcript Slide 1

DigiQUAL™
DigiQUAL™: a Digital Library Evaluation Service
Presented at 7th Northumbria by
Martha Kyrillidou, ARL
Bruce Thompson, Texas A&M
South Africa, August 14, 2007
www.digiqual.org
Library Assessment in an
Electronic Era
What are some of the current developments with
library assessments efforts?
ARL StatsQUAL™
E-Metrics
LibQUAL+®
DigiQUAL™
MINES for Libraries™
Where are the most critical needs and opportunities?
What are the lessons learned?
www.arl.org
DigiQUAL™
• NSF Funding
• Building on the LibQUAL+® experience
• Secures feedback on user’s perceptions of library’s web
site
• Five questions on services, functionality, and content
• Goal is to determine utility, reliability, and trustworthiness
www.digiqual.org
Developing DigiQUAL™
Survey Items
Background: ServQUAL  LibQUAL+®  DigiQUAL™
LibQUAL+®
Dimensions of Service Quality:
DigiQUAL™
12 themes of service quality:
• Affect of Service
• Information Control
• Library as Place
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Accessibility
Navigability
Interoperability
Collection building
Resource Use
Evaluating collections
DL as community for users
DL as community for developers
DL as community for reviewers
Copyright
Role of Federations
DL Sustainability
www.digiqual.org
Evaluating the NSF National
Science Digital Library Collections
Categories and Themes from DLESE
and MERLOT focus Groups
I.
Web attractiveness; Design
features
“I think the homepage is too cluttered.”
“I really appreciate no pop-ups.”
“I would want a site that is truly simplistic; there’s a
lot of initial information on the homepage.”
II. Accessibility; Navigability
“…there’s a lot of links, you know, like that–
[unusable, without a username]..”
“…I think another step is that the interfacing needs
to be designed in such a way that the data is
taken advantage of in simple, easy-to-use,
and intuitive.”
“Vocabulary is an issue.”
III. Interoperability of the Sites
“Yes and no. [Interoperability] depends on the
learning object that you access.”
“I think there’s a large group of educators out there
that are certainly capable, knowing content,
but actually using the computer, using things
in that domain—it’s very difficult for them.
Again, it’s something new to them; not that
they’re stupid or something like that.”
Evaluating the NSF National
Science Digital Library Collections
Social and Psychological Aspects
of the Digital Libraries and their
Collections
IV. Library and Digital Library as
“Community”
“I’m beginning to understand now that this whole
notion of community is incredibly important—
probably far more important that us coming
up any ‘grand schema’, if you will.”
Library and Digital Library as
“Community” continued
“I think [community] brings to mind two very
important things: 1) the notion of community
within and between MERLOT…and 2) I was just
kind of blown away by the fact that [the
physicists] would completely ignore any kind of
‘knowledge’ that we obviously have in the library
community on how things should be done, and
they built this thing along the lines of how they
actually think!”
V.
Collection Building
“Collection building…we will forever be in a
collection-building phase as far as I can
tell.”
“It was previously in its rapid growth stage
and trying to figure out who we are and
how to tell it to people. And now we’re
into what don’t have and why can’t
people find what they want.”
VI. Meta-data issues
Sample Responses:
“The way around meta-data issues, is ‘crosswalking’.”
“…and the critical thing is we’re still developing a
control vocabulary for the library.”
Meta-data issues (cont’d)
“My impression if that users want to have
resources described in a way that anticipates the
things that they want in that resource, whether it
is a Website or a learning object, how granular it
is [that is, is it an image, or is it an entire
website?].”
VII. Copyright Issues;
Ownership of Materials
“But [the copyright/ownership issue] does suggest
something about ownership and about the way
we now view knowledge as a multi-person
constructed set of constructions.”
“The people who create it…have ownership.”
“Who owns the content? You own your own
content, but we own the meta-data. I mean, we
can have the meta-data…The meta-data can be
harvested by NSF.”
VIII.How Digital Library Resources
are Used
“And what I found is that they [teachers who utilize
the digital libraries] really sought the animations,
the quick things that they could take into
classrooms 10 minutes before class.”
“I use MERLOT basically to show all my faculty
how to find online course objects that they can
use in conjunction with their regular classroom
instruction.”
How Digital Library Resources are
Used (cont’d)
“So I use both a search and a harvest. I have to
tell you that I also harvest stuff. There are tools
out there…some of them very specialized, some
of them not so specialized. And I must tell you
that I shamelessly harvest stuff, and I’m sure I’m
committing all kinds of copyright violations on a
daily basis…But I do that because I’m fearful
that the stuff will sometimes disappear, and so I
harvest that. So I’m both a searcher and a
harvester. And that’s how I use MERLOT.”
X. Issues of Sustainability,
Financing, Support
“I would ask [NSF] for the strategy of sustainability.
Because when it comes down to it, if it can’t be
sustained, then it really doesn’t matter.”
“And when you talk about sustainability, Chris, are
you talking about how are we going to keep the
Federal government funding it? Or are you
talking about how do we keep growing the
collection and the community?” “Both”
IX. Evaluation Issues for Users,
Developers, Reviewers and Others
“Mainly, the broken links are the problem for me.”
“I guess because there’s so much information
there, it wasn’t as intuitive as a lot of Websites
that I’ve been to before. And I went to it a lot.
Evaluation Issues continued
“The one thing I’ve discovered with mine [my
teachers], just having real-time data isn’t
enough…It’s not just the data, you have to have
the documentation; and it doesn’t have to be a
full lesson plan, Just enough so that they can
know the lesson plan.”
DIGITAL LIBRARY ENVIRONMENT
Technical Composition
Human/System
Interaction
Vetting Process
As a social network
Preservation
Community
User/Creator
Content
Takers and givers
Propagation
Access
Reliability
Trustworthiness/A
ccuracy
Scope &
Sequence
Active Links
Browsability
Organized
Navigability
Self-sufficiency
Trustworthiness
(feels “right)
Usability
Fulfills
purpose/useful
Pilot Testing Survey Items and
Implementation
www.digiqual.org
Building a Survey
• Review and select items
• Issue:
aligning items to individual DL needs & users –
vocabulary and content
www.digiqual.org
Building a Survey, cont.
Customize
Survey
Issue: Flexibility vs. Standardization
www.digiqual.org
Implementing Survey –
Notification Methods
Links on site
Newsletters
Next to resources
Issues: no pop-ups, no individual emails
www.digiqual.org
Implementing Survey Incentives
Issues: must be easily transferable,
requires email address - clear IRB
www.digiqual.org
Analysis and Reporting Issues
(mis)Interpreting results from individual digital libraries in
the context of other sites
Sites reluctant to share
data and results
www.digiqual.org
Outstanding
Issues and Challenges
• Unique DLs: niche market, critical mass, both?
• Balance:
– custom vs. generic content  results
– flexible vs. standard implementation  scaling
• Mixed methods
– Preserving user privacy
– Collecting truly useful data
• Moving target: digital libraries as… it depends.
www.digiqual.org
Effective, Sustainable and Practical
Assessment Findings
• Assessment protocols that had the
greatest impact in the last five years:
– LibQUAL®
– Usability Testing
Managing the Total Customer
Experience
• Offering products or services is no longer enough
• Organizations must provide their customers with
satisfactory experiences
• Competing on this dimension means orchestrating the
‘clues’ that people detect
• The first step is recognizing the clues an organization is
sending to its customers
• Organizations must manage the emotional component of
experiences with the same rigor they manage product
and service functionality
• Organizations that simply tweak design elements or
focus on the customer experience in isolated pockets of
their business will be disappointed in the results
– Berry et al, Spring 2002, MIT Sloan Management Review